Credit Explained
Credit Utilization Explained (Why the 30% Rule Isn’t the Real Rule)
This is one of the biggest factors in your credit score — and one of the most misunderstood.
Quick answer
- Credit utilization = how much of your available credit you’re using.
- Lower is better — 30% is not a magic number.
- Utilization can change your score month to month.
What credit utilization actually means
Credit utilization is the percentage of your credit limits that you’re using. It’s usually calculated using your statement balance, not what you owe after the due date.
Simple example:
Card limit: $10,000
Statement balance: $2,500
Utilization: 25%
The truth about the “30% rule”
You’ll often hear that staying under 30% utilization is “good.” That’s not wrong — but it’s not the full picture.
- Below 30% is better than above 30%.
- Below 10% is better than 20–30%.
- Very low utilization usually scores best.
The scoring models don’t see 30% as a target — they see it as a risk threshold.
Overall vs per-card utilization
Utilization is measured two ways:
- Overall utilization: All balances ÷ all limits.
- Per-card utilization: Each card individually.
One maxed-out card can hurt you even if your overall utilization looks fine.
Statement balance vs current balance
Most lenders report the balance on your statement closing date, not what you owe after making a payment.
If your statement closes at $3,000 and you pay it off the next day, your credit report still shows $3,000 for that month.
How to lower utilization fast
- Pay balances down before the statement date.
- Spread spending across multiple cards.
- Request credit limit increases (no new spending).
- Avoid closing cards with available credit.
Key takeaway
Credit utilization isn’t about debt — it’s about ratios. Control when balances report, and you control one of the fastest-moving parts of your credit score.